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In a hearing that lasted fewer than five minutes, Judge Susan Coleman granted a request to exhume the body of a man authorities now say with poisoned with cyanide. Phil Rogers reports. (Published Friday, Jan 11, 2013)

Updated at 12:26 AM CDT on Saturday, Jan 12, 2013

Chicago’s million dollar murder mystery shifted to a Daley Center courtroom Friday as a Cook County judge ordered lotto winner Urooj Khan’s body exhumed in hopes of clarifying exactly what caused his death.

Already, Medical Examiner Stephen Cina has certified Khan’s death as a homicide, saying the lotto winner somehow ingested a fatal dose of cyanide. But as they went before Judge Susan Coleman Friday, prosecutors said in a filing it was necessary to exhume Khan’s body, among other reasons, "to rule out any other natural causes" of the Chicago man’s death.

Widow Questioned About Cyanide Victim's Last Meal

Shabana Ansari says her husband ate dinner between 8:30 and 9:00 one night last July and grew ill at about 3 a.m. Phil Rogers reports. (Published Thursday, Jan 10, 2013)

"As Mr. Khan was buried without being embalmed," the motion stated, "it is important that Mr. Khan’s body be exhumed as expeditiously as possible."

In a hearing that lasted fewer than five minutes, Judge Coleman granted the exhumation request.

Documents Show Battle Over Poisoned Lottery Winner's Estate

Court documents shed no light on the circumstances of Khan's death, but add a layer of drama to the story. Dick Johnson reports. (Published Wednesday, Jan 9, 2013)

"We have to have justice served," the victim’s sister, Meraj Khan, said outside the courtroom. "If that’s what it takes to have justice served and to have peace, then that’s what needs to be done."

Khan’s widow, Shabana Ansari, did not attend the hearing. But as siblings and others gathered outside the courtroom, they made clear that they were suspicious of his death which occurred mere weeks after his million dollar lottery windfall.

"We know him. He was a perfectly healthy person,” said Khan’s brother, ImTiaz Khan. "It is impossible that he would die like this."

As he spoke, ImTiaz waved a notebook which he suggested contained information crucial to the case.

"I have 45 pages written down," he said. "A whole life history. I cannot reveal anything until I know when to do this."

Khan’s sister recalled the morning he died, and a frantic phone call at 4 a.m.

"Just screaming on the phone," she said. "I couldn’t understand what was going on. I couldn’t understand, and the call was from his number."

Family members said they were forced to accept that Khan had died an untimely death and said they were blindsided by the news that his passing had been ruled a homicide. Brother-in-law Mohammed Zaman said he first became aware when Khan’s wife cut off contact.

"At one point she said to me, she could not talk to me because of the attorneys," he said. "I was shocked. I said, 'What attorneys?' And she said, 'Criminal defense attorneys.' I was shocked!”